Heart Failure: Management
1951CHAPTER 258
Failure (SADHART-CHF) trial, showed that although sertraline was
safe, it did not provide greater reduction in depression or improve cardiovascular status among patients with HF and depression compared
with nurse-driven multidisciplinary management.
Atrial arrhythmias, especially atrial fibrillation, are common and
serve as a harbinger of worse prognosis in patients with HF. When rate
control is inadequate or symptoms persist, pursuing a rhythm control
strategy is reasonable. Rhythm control may be achieved via pharmacotherapy or by percutaneous or surgical techniques, and referral to practitioners or centers experienced in these modalities is recommended.
Antiarrhythmic drug therapy should be restricted to amiodarone and
dofetilide, both of which have been shown to be safe and effective but
do not alter the natural history of the underlying disease. The Antiarrhythmic Trial with Dronedarone in Moderate-to-Severe Congestive
Heart Failure Evaluating Morbidity Decrease (ANDROMEDA) studied
the effects of the novel antiarrhythmic agent dronedarone and found
an increased mortality due to worsening HF. Catheter ablation and
pulmonary vein isolation appear to be safe and effective in this highrisk cohort and compare favorably with the more established practice
of atrioventricular node ablation and biventricular pacing.
Diabetes mellitus is a frequent comorbidity in HF. Prior studies
using thiazolidinediones (activators of peroxisome proliferatoractivated receptors) have been associated with worsening HF. Glucagonlike peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists such as liraglutide have also been tested
and do not lead to greater post-hospitalization, clinical stability, or
worsening in HF. The role of SGLT-2 inhibitors in HF has been previously discussed.
■ NEUROMODULATION USING DEVICE THERAPY
Autonomic dysfunction is common in HF, and attempts at using
devices to modulate the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems
have been undertaken. Broadly, devices that achieve vagal nerve stimulation, baroreflex activation, renal sympathetic denervation, spinal
cord stimulation, or left cardiac sympathetic denervation have been
employed. While small preclinical and clinical studies have demonstrated benefits, large randomized trials, when conducted, have failed.
The INOVATE-HF study tested vagal nerve stimulation versus optimal medical therapy among individuals with stable HF. Vagus nerve
stimulation did not reduce the rate of death or hospitalization for HF.
However, functional capacity and QOL were favorably affected by
vagus nerve stimulation.
■ CARDIAC CONTRACTILITY MODULATION
Cardiac contractility modulation (CCM) is a device-based therapy for
HF that involves nonexcitatory electrical stimulation to the right ventricular septal wall during the absolute myocardial refractory period to
augment the strength of subsequent myocardial contraction. A series
of small, randomized, prospective clinical trials, as well as a number of
real-world observational registries, have suggested that application of
CCM to selected patients with HF may improve symptoms, functional
capacity, and QOL, although no effect on hard clinical outcomes such
as HF hospitalization or mortality has been established. The predominant benefits of CCM appear to accrue to those with symptomatic
HFrEF (EF 25–45%) and narrow QRS duration (for whom cardiac
resynchronization therapy is not an option), and the approach can be
combined with an implantable defibrillator. The device is currently
available for use in selected patients with HFrEF outside the United
States but is not currently endorsed by clinical treatment guidelines
in the United States or Europe as part of the routine HF treatment
armamentarium.
CARDIAC RESYNCHRONIZATION THERAPY
Nonsynchronous contraction between the walls of the left ventricle
(intraventricular) or between the ventricular chambers (interventricular) impairs systolic function, decreases mechanical efficiency of
contraction, and adversely affects ventricular filling. Mechanical dyssynchrony results in an increase in wall stress and worsens functional
mitral regurgitation. The single most important association of extent of
dyssynchrony is a widened QRS interval on the surface electrocardiogram, particularly in the presence of a left bundle branch block pattern.
With placement of a pacing lead via the coronary sinus to the lateral
wall of the ventricle, cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) enables
a more synchronous ventricular contraction by aligning the timing
of activation of the opposing walls. Early studies showed improved
exercise capacity, reduction in symptoms, and evidence of reverse
remodeling. The Cardiac Resynchronization in Heart Failure Study
(CARE-HF) trial was the first study to demonstrate a reduction in allcause mortality with CRT placement in patients with HFrEF on optimal therapy with continued moderate-to-severe residual symptoms of
NYHA class III or IV HF. More recent clinical trials have demonstrated
disease-modifying properties of CRT in even minimally symptomatic
patients with HFrEF, including the Resynchronization–Defibrillation
for Ambulatory Heart Failure Trial (RAFT) and Multicenter Automatic
Defibrillator Implantation Trial with Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (MADIT-CRT), both of which sought to use CRT in combination
with an implantable defibrillator. Most benefit in mildly symptomatic
HFrEF patients accrues from applying this therapy in those with a QRS
width of >149 ms and a left bundle branch block pattern. Attempts to
further optimize risk stratification and expand indications for CRT
using modalities other than electrocardiography have proven disappointing. In particular, echocardiographically derived measures of
dyssynchrony vary tremendously, and narrow QRS dyssynchrony has
not proven to be a good target for treatment. Uncertainty surrounds
the benefits of CRT in those with ADHF, a predominant right bundle branch block pattern, atrial fibrillation, and evidence of scar in
the lateral wall, which is the precise location where the CRT lead is
positioned.
SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH PREVENTION IN
HEART FAILURE
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) due to ventricular arrhythmias is the
mode of death in approximately half of patients with HF and is particularly proportionally prevalent in HFrEF patients with early stages
of the disease. Patients who survive an episode of SCD are considered
to be at very high risk and qualify for placement of an implantable
cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). Although primary prevention is challenging, the degree of residual left ventricular dysfunction despite
optimal medical therapy (≤35%) to allow for adequate remodeling
and the underlying etiology (post–myocardial infarction or ischemic
cardiomyopathy) are the two single most important risk markers for
stratification of need and benefit. Currently, patients with NYHA class
II or III symptoms of HF and an LVEF <35%, irrespective of etiology
of HF, are appropriate candidates for ICD prophylactic therapy. In
patients with a myocardial infarction and optimal medical therapy with
residual LVEF ≤30% (even when asymptomatic), placement of an ICD
is appropriate. A recent Danish trial suggested that prophylactic ICD
implantation in patients with symptomatic systolic HF not caused by
coronary artery disease was not associated with a significantly lower
long-term rate of death from any cause than was usual clinical care. In
this trial, benefits were noted in those aged <60 years. In patients with a
terminal illness and a predicted life span of <6 months or in those with
NYHA class IV symptoms who are refractory to medications and who
are not candidates for transplant, the risks of multiple ICD shocks must
be carefully weighed against the survival benefits. If a patient meets
the QRS criteria for CRT, combined CRT with ICD is often employed
(Table 258-3).
SURGICAL THERAPY IN HEART FAILURE
Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is considered in patients
with ischemic cardiomyopathy with multivessel coronary artery
disease. The recognition that hibernating myocardium, defined as
myocardial tissue with abnormal function but maintained cellular
function, could recover after revascularization led to the notion
that revascularization with CABG would be useful in those with
living myocardium. Revascularization is most robustly supported
in individuals with ongoing angina and left ventricular failure.
1952 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
Revascularizing those with left ventricular failure in the absence of
angina remains controversial. The Surgical Treatment for Ischemic
Heart Failure (STICH) trial in patients with an EF of ≤35% and
coronary artery disease amenable to CABG demonstrated no significant initial benefit compared to medical therapy. However, patients
assigned to CABG had lower rates of death from cardiovascular
causes and of death from any cause or hospitalization for cardiovascular causes over 10 years than among those who received medical
therapy alone. An ancillary study of this trial also determined that
the detection of hibernation (viability) pre-revascularization did not
materially influence the efficacy of this approach, nor did it help
to define a population unlikely to benefit if hibernation was not
detected.
Surgical ventricular restoration (SVR), a technique characterized by infarct exclusion to remodel the left ventricle by reshaping it
surgically in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy and dominant
anterior left ventricular dysfunction, has been proposed. However,
in a 1000-patient trial in patients with HFrEF who underwent CABG
alone or CABG plus SVR, the addition of SVR to CABG had no disease-modifying effect. However, left ventricular aneurysm surgery is
still advocated in those with refractory HF, ventricular arrhythmias,
or thromboembolism arising from an akinetic aneurysmal segment of
the ventricle. Other remodeling procedures, such as use of an external
mesh-like net attached around the heart to limit further enlargement,
have not been shown to provide hard clinical benefits, although favorable cardiac remodeling was noted.
Functional (or secondary) mitral regurgitation (MR) occurs with
varying degrees in patients with HFrEF and dilated ventricles, and
its severity is correlated inversely with prognosis. Annular dilatation
and leaflet noncoaptation related to distorted papillary muscle geometry in the context of ventricular remodeling is typically responsible,
although in patients with ischemic heart disease and prior myocardial
infarction, leaflet tethering and displacement may contribute. The
primary approach to management of functional MR is optimization
of guideline-directed medical therapy, followed by CRT in eligible
patients, but relief may be incomplete for many patients with advanced
HF. In these patients with HF and severe left ventricular dysfunction who are not candidates for surgical coronary revascularization,
surgical mitral valve repair (MVR) to remedy functional MR carries
significant risk and remains controversial. The development of percutaneous approaches to edge-to-edge MVR has provided a less invasive
approach that enables reduction in functional MR at lower risk than
conventional surgery. Recently, two large randomized trials of transcatheter MVR using this approach have been conducted in patients
with symptomatic HFrEF and moderate-severe functional MR. In the
Cardiovascular Outcomes Assessment of the MitraClip Percutaneous
Therapy for Heart Failure Patients with Functional Mitral Regurgitation (COAPT) study, patients allocated to MVR versus standard HF
therapy experienced a marked reduction in both HF hospitalizations
and mortality at 2 years, supporting the efficacy of this approach. In the
second trial, Percutaneous Repair with the MitraClip Device for Severe
Functional/Secondary Mitral Regurgitation (MITRA-FR), which
employed a similar design, the rates of death or HF hospitalization
did not differ between the percutaneous MVR and medical therapy
groups. The precise reason for discrepant results between these studies
remains unclear but may be related to differences in background utilization of guideline-directed medical therapy, procedural success rates,
and patient selection (particularly whether or not the severity of MR
is proportionate or disproportionate to the degree of left ventricular
cavity dilation). Because mortality rates at 2 years remain high even
with percutaneous MVR, patients with advanced symptoms of HF in
whom MR severity is driven principally by end-stage left ventricular
remodeling should also be considered for advanced therapies such as
mechanical circulatory support.
CELLULAR AND GENE-BASED THERAPY
The cardiomyocyte possesses regenerative capacity, and such renewal
is accelerated under conditions of stress and injury, such as an ischemic event or HF. Investigations that use either bone marrow–derived
precursor cells or autologous cardiac-derived cells have gained traction
but have not generally improved clinical outcomes in a convincing
manner. More promising, however, are cardiac-derived stem cells. Two
preliminary pilot trials delivering cells via an intracoronary approach
have been reported. In one, autologous c-kit–positive cells isolated
from the atria obtained from patients undergoing CABG were cultured
and reinfused. In another, cardiosphere-derived cells grown from endomyocardial biopsy specimens were used. These small trials demonstrated improvements in left ventricular function but require far more
work to usher in a clinical therapeutic success. Efforts to utilize mesenchymal stem cells to facilitate left ventricular recovery and weaning
from mechanical circulatory support in patients with left ventricular
assist devices have also been disappointing. The appropriate route of
administration, the quantity of cells to achieve a minimal therapeutic
threshold, the constitution of these cells (single source or mixed), the
mechanism by which benefit accrues, and short- and long-term safety
remain to be elucidated.
Targeting molecular aberrations using gene transfer therapy, mostly
with an adenoviral vector, has been tested in HFrEF. A cellular target
includes calcium cycling proteins such as inhibitors of phospholamban
such as SERCA2a, which is deficient in patients with HFrEF. Primarily
responsible for reincorporating calcium into the sarcoplasmic reticulum during diastole, this target was tested in the CUPID (Efficacy and
Safety Study of Genetically Targeted Enzyme Replacement Therapy for
Advanced Heart Failure) trial. This study used coronary arterial infusion of adeno-associated virus type 1 carrying the gene for SERCA2a
and initially demonstrated that natriuretic peptides were decreased,
reverse remodeling was noted, and symptomatic improvements were
forthcoming. However, a confirmatory trial failed to meet its primary
efficacy endpoint.
More advanced therapies for late-stage HF such as left ventricular
assist devices and cardiac transplantation are covered in detail in
Chap. 260.
DISEASE MANAGEMENT AND
SUPPORTIVE CARE
Despite stellar outcomes with medical therapy, admission rates following HF hospitalization remain high, with nearly half of all patients
readmitted to hospital within 6 months of discharge. Recurrent HF and
related cardiovascular conditions account for only half of readmissions
in patients with HF, whereas other comorbidity-related conditions
account for the rest. The key to achieving enhanced outcomes must
begin with the attention to transitional care at the index hospitalization
with facilitated discharge through comprehensive discharge planning,
TABLE 258-3 Principles of ICD Implantation for Primary Prevention
of Sudden Death
PRINCIPLE COMMENT
Arrhythmia–sudden
death mismatch
Sudden death in heart failure patients is generally due
to progressive LVD, not a focal arrhythmia substrate
(except in patients with post-MI HF)
Diminishing returns
with advanced disease
Intervention at early stages of HF most successful
since sudden death diminishes as cause of death with
advanced HF
Timing of benefits LVEF should be evaluated on optimal medical therapy
or after revascularization before ICD therapy is
employed; no benefit to ICD implant within 40 days of
an MI (unless for secondary prevention)
Estimation of benefits
and prognosis
Patients and clinicians often overestimate benefits of
ICDs; an ICD discharge is not equivalent to an episode
of sudden death (some ventricular arrhythmias
terminate spontaneously); appropriate ICD discharges
are associated with a worse near-term prognosis
Abbreviations: HF, heart failure; ICD, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator; LVD,
left ventricular disease; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; MI, myocardial
infarction.
Heart Failure: Management
1953CHAPTER 258
patient and caregiver education, appropriate use of visiting nurses,
and planned follow-up. Early postdischarge follow-up, whether by
telephone or clinic-based, may be critical to ensuring stability because
most HF-related readmissions tend to occur within the first 2 weeks
after discharge. Although routinely advocated, intensive surveillance
of weight and vital signs with use of telemonitoring has not decreased
hospitalizations. Serial measurement of intrathoracic impedance has
been utilized to identify early signals of worsening congestion to guide
preemptive management to obviate the need for hospitalization. However, when systematically studied in randomized trials, this approach
has not been proven to improve outcomes in comparison with routine
HF care and may even enhance the rate of hospitalization due to the
high frequency of impedance threshold crossings and device alerts.
Implantable hemodynamic monitoring systems that directly measure
pulmonary artery pressure tend to provide signals for early decompensation, and in patients with HF and moderately advanced symptoms
across the full spectrum of EF, such systems have been shown to provide information that can allow implementation of therapy to avoid
hospitalizations by as much as 39% (in the CardioMEMS Heart Sensor
Allows Monitoring of Pressure to Improve Outcomes in NYHA Class
III Heart Failure Patients [CHAMPION] trial). Whether this reduction in hospital admissions translates into a long-term reduction in
mortality remains to be determined by ongoing trials (Hemodynamic
Guided Management of Heart Failure [GUIDE-HF]; clinicaltrials.
gov identifier: NCT03387813). Alternate approaches to longitudinal
HF monitoring that leverage multiparameter signals derived from
implantable cardiac rhythm devices such as pacemakers and defibrillators to provide a global index of congestion are also being explored
as adjuncts to longitudinal HF management (Multiple Cardiac Sensors
for the Management of Heart Failure [MANAGE-HF]; clinicaltrials.
gov identifier: NCT03237858).
Once HF becomes advanced, regularly scheduled review of the
disease course and options with the patient and family is recommended, including discussions surrounding end-of-life preferences
when patients are comfortable in an outpatient setting. As the disease
state advances further, integrating care with social workers, pharmacists, and community-based nursing may be critical in improving
patient satisfaction with the therapy, enhancing QOL, and avoiding HF
hospitalizations. Equally important is attention to seasonal influenza
vaccinations and periodic pneumococcal vaccines that may obviate
non-HF hospitalizations in these ill patients. When nearing end of life,
facilitating a shift in priorities to outpatient and hospice palliation is
key, as are discussions around advanced therapeutics and continued
use of ICD prophylaxis, which may worsen QOL and prolong death.
Small randomized trials have suggested that systematic integration of
palliative care considerations in high-risk HF patients by a specialized
team has been demonstrated to improve QOL, anxiety, depression, and
spiritual well-being and to facilitate goal-concordant care.
GLOBAL CONSIDERATIONS
Substantial differences exist in the practice of HF therapeutics and
outcomes by geographic location. The penetrance of CRT and ICD
is higher in the United States than in Europe. Conversely, therapy
unavailable in the United States, such as levosimendan, is designated
as useful in Europe. Variation in the benefits of beta blockers based
on world region remains an area of controversy. In oral pharmacologic
therapy trials of HFrEF, patients from southwest Europe have a lower
incidence of ischemic cardiomyopathy and those in North America
tend to have more diabetes and prior coronary revascularization. There
is also regional variation in medication use even after accounting for
indication. In trials of HF, disparate effects are noted across populations. As a recent example, in TOPCAT, the drug spironolactone
was effective when used in the U.S. population, whereas patients
recruited from Russia and contiguous territories showed no difference.
Whether this represents population differences or trial conduct disparity remains to be investigated. ADHF patients in Eastern Europe
tend to be younger, with higher EFs and lower natriuretic peptide
levels. Patients from South America tend to have the lowest rates of
comorbidities, revascularization, and device use. In contrast, patients
from North America have the highest comorbidity burden with high
revascularization and device use rates. Given geographic differences
in baseline characteristics and clinical outcomes, the generalizability
of therapeutic outcomes in patients in the United States and Western
Europe may require verification.
■ FURTHER READING
Borlaug BA: The pathophysiology of heart failure with preserved
ejection fraction. Nat Rev Cardiol 11:507, 2014.
Braunwald E: Heart failure. JACC Heart Fail 1:1, 2013.
Braunwald E: The war against heart failure: The Lancet lecture. Lancet 385:812, 2015.
Hein AM et al: Medical management of heart failure with reduced
ejection fraction in patients with advanced renal disease. JACC Heart
Fail 7:371, 2019.
Hollenberg SM et al: 2019 ACC Expert Consensus Decision Pathway
on Risk Assessment, Management, and Clinical Trajectory of Patients
Hospitalized with Heart Failure: A Report of the American College
of Cardiology Solution Set Oversight Committee. J Am Coll Cardiol
74:1966, 2019.
Hussein AA, Wilkoff BL: Cardiac implantable electronic device therapy in heart failure. Circ Res 124:1584, 2019.
Kusumoto FM et al: HRS/ACC/AHA expert consensus statement on
the use of implantable cardioverter-defibrillator therapy in patients
who are not included or not well represented in clinical trials. Circulation 130:94, 2014.
Lam CS et al: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: From
mechanisms to therapies. Eur Heart J 39:2780, 2018.
Maddox TM et al: 2021 Update to the 2017 ACC Expert Consensus
Decision Pathway for Optimization of Heart Failure Treatment:
Answers to 10 Pivotal Issues About Heart Failure with Reduced
Ejection Fraction: A Report of the American College of Cardiology
Solution Set Oversight Committee. J Am Coll Cardiol 77:772, 2021.
McMurray JJ et al: PARADIGM-HF Investigators and Committees.
Angiotensin-neprilysin inhibition versus enalapril in heart failure.
N Engl J Med 371:993, 2014.
McMurray JJV et al: Dapagliflozin in patients with heart failure and
reduced ejection fraction. N Engl J Med 381:1995, 2019.
Obadia JF et al: Percutaneous mitral valve repair or medical therapy
for secondary mitral regurgitation. N Engl J Med 379:2297, 2018.
Packer M, Grayburn PA: Neurohormonal and transcatheter repair
strategies for proportionate and disproportionate functional mitral
regurgitation in heart failure. JACC Heart Fail 7:518, 2019.
Packer M et al: Cardiovascular and renal outcomes with empagliflozin
in heart failure. N Engl J Med 383:1413, 2020.
Parikh KS et al: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction expert
panel report: Current controversies and implications for clinical trials. JACC Heart Fail 6:619, 2018.
Pfeffer MA et al: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction in
perspective. Circ Res 124:1598, 2019.
Solomon SD et al: Angiotensin-neprilysin inhibition in heart failure
with preserved ejection fraction. N Engl J Med 381:1609, 2019.
Stone GW et al: Transcatheter mitral valve repair in patients with
heart failure. N Engl J Med 379:2307, 2018.
Teerlink JR et al: Cardiac myosin activation with omectamtiv mecarbil in
systolic heart failure. N Engl J Med 384:105, 2021.
Velazquez EJ et al: STICHES Investigators. Coronary-artery bypass
surgery in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy. N Engl J Med
374:1511, 2016.
1954 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
■ DEFINITION AND CLASSIFICATION
Cardiomyopathy is disease of the heart muscle. It is estimated that
cardiomyopathy accounts for 5–10% of the heart failure in the
5–6 million patients carrying that diagnosis in the United States. This
term is intended to exclude cardiac dysfunction that results from other
structural heart disease, such as coronary artery disease, primary valve
disease, or severe hypertension; however, in general usage, the phrase
ischemic cardiomyopathy is sometimes applied to describe diffuse
dysfunction attributed to multivessel coronary artery disease, and
nonischemic cardiomyopathy is used to describe cardiomyopathy from
other causes. As of 2013, cardiomyopathies are defined as “disorders
characterized by morphologically and functionally abnormal myocardium in the absence of any other disease that is sufficient, by itself,
to cause the observed phenotype.” It was further specified that many
cardiomyopathies will be attributable to genetic disease.1
The traditional classification of cardiomyopathies into a triad of
dilated, restrictive, and hypertrophic was based initially on autopsy
specimens and later on echocardiographic findings. Dilated and
hypertrophic cardiomyopathies can be distinguished on the basis of
left ventricular wall thickness and cavity dimension; however, restrictive cardiomyopathy can have variably increased wall thickness and
chamber dimensions that range from reduced to slightly increased,
with prominent atrial enlargement. Restrictive cardiomyopathy is now
defined more on the basis of abnormal diastolic function, which is also
present but initially less prominent in dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Restrictive cardiomyopathy can overlap in presentation,
gross morphology, and etiology with both hypertrophic and dilated
cardiomyopathies (Table 259-1).
Expanding information renders this classification triad based on
phenotype increasingly inadequate to define disease or therapy. While
dilated cardiomyopathy is associated with low left ventricular ejection
fraction and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with normal or high ejection fraction, efforts to define intermediate phenotypes based on arbitrary thresholds for mid-range ejection fraction are confounded by the
increasing prevalence of patients whose low ejection has improved with
contemporary therapies. Identification of more genetic determinants
of cardiomyopathy has suggested a four-way classification scheme
of etiology as primary (affecting primarily the heart) and secondary
to other systemic disease. The primary causes are then divided into
genetic, mixed genetic and acquired, and acquired. In practice, however, genetic information is rarely available at initial presentation, the
phenotypic expression of a given mutation varies widely, and acquired
cardiomyopathies may also be influenced by genetic predisposition,
which can be monogenic or polygenic, to establish a “two-hit” etiology. Identification of genetic causes of cardiomyopathy will become
increasingly relevant as classification moves beyond morphology to
identify specific molecular targets for intervention.
GENERAL PRESENTATION
The early symptoms of cardiomyopathy often reflect exertional intolerance with breathlessness or fatigue. As filling pressures become elevated at rest, shortness of breath may occur during routine activity or
when lying down at night. Although often considered the hallmark of
congestion, peripheral edema may be absent despite severe fluid retention, particularly in younger patients in whom abdominal discomfort
from hepato-splanchnic congestion and ascites may dominate. Patients
259 Cardiomyopathy and
Myocarditis
Neal K. Lakdawala, Lynne Warner Stevenson,
Joseph Loscalzo
may also present initially with atypical chest pain, with palpitations or
syncope related to associated rhythm disorders, or with an embolism
from an intracardiac thrombus. Acute cardiogenic shock is the primary
presentation for fulminant myocarditis, which can occur in otherwise
healthy young adults and require rapid diagnosis and aggressive support, after which cardiac function may improve to near-normal levels.
The nonspecific term congestive heart failure describes only the
resulting syndrome of fluid retention, which is common to all three
structural phenotypes of cardiomyopathy and also to other cardiac
structural diseases, such as mitral valve disease, that are associated with
elevated intracardiac filling pressures. Initial evaluation begins with
a detailed clinical history and examination seeking clues to cardiac,
extracardiac, and genetic causes of heart disease (Tables 259-1 and
259-2). Echocardiography remains the initial imaging modality, with
increasing use of MRI to provide further information on myocardial
tissue characterization and evidence of focal and diffuse inflammation
and abnormal interstitium.
■ GENETIC CAUSES OF CARDIOMYOPATHY
Estimates for the prevalence of a genetic etiology for cardiomyopathy continue to rise, with increasing availability of genetic
testing and attention to the family history. Well-recognized in
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, heritability is also present in at least 30%
of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) without other clear etiology. Careful
family history should elicit information about not only known cardiomyopathy and heart failure, but also family members who have had
sudden death, often incorrectly attributed to “a massive heart attack,”
who have had atrial fibrillation or pacemaker implantation by middle
age, or who have muscular dystrophy.
Most familial cardiomyopathies are inherited in an autosomal
dominant pattern, with occasional autosomal recessive, matrilineal
(mitochondrial), and X-linked inheritance (Table 259-3). Missense
mutations with amino acid substitutions and truncating variants are
the most common genetic abnormalities in cardiomyopathy. Expressed
mutant proteins may interfere with function of the normal allele
through a dominant negative mechanism. Mutations introducing a
premature stop codon (nonsense) or shift in the reading frame (frameshift) may create a truncated or unstable protein, the lack of which
causes cardiomyopathy (haploinsufficiency). Deletions or duplications
of an entire exon or gene are uncommon causes of cardiomyopathy,
except for the dystrophinopathies.
Many different genes have been implicated in human cardiomyopathy (locus heterogeneity), and many mutations within those genes
have been associated with disease (allelic heterogeneity). Although
most identified mutations are “private” to individual families, several
specific mutations are found repeatedly, either due to a founder effect
or recurrent mutations at a common residue.
Genetic cardiomyopathy is characterized by age-dependent and
incomplete penetrance. The defining phenotype of cardiomyopathy is
rarely present at birth and, in some individuals, may never manifest.
Related individuals who carry the same mutation may differ in the
severity and rate of progression of cardiac dysfunction and associated
rhythm disorders, indicating the important role of other genetic,
epigenetic, and environmental modifiers in disease expression. Sex
appears to play a role, as penetrance and clinical severity may be
greater in men for most cardiomyopathies. Clinical disease expression
is generally more severe in the ~1% of individuals who harbor two or
more mutations linked to cardiomyopathy. However, the clinical course
of a patient usually cannot be predicted based on which mutation is
present; thus, current therapy is based on the phenotype rather than
the genetic defect. Currently, the greatest utility of genetic testing for
cardiomyopathy is to inform family evaluations. However, genetic testing occasionally enables the detection of a disease for which specific
therapy is indicated, such as the replacements for defective metabolic
enzymes in Fabry’s disease and Gaucher’s disease.
■ GENES AND PATHWAYS IN CARDIOMYOPATHY
Mutations in sarcomeric genes, encoding the thick and thin myofilament proteins, are the best characterized. While the majority are 1
From E Arbustini et al: J Am Coll Cardiol 62:2046, 2013.
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1955CHAPTER 259
associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, sarcomeric mutations
are also implicated in DCM, and some in left ventricular noncompaction. The most commonly recognized genetic causes of DCM are
truncating mutations of the giant protein titin, encoded by TTN, which
maintains sarcomere structure and acts as a key signaling molecule.
As cytoskeletal proteins play crucial roles in the structure, connection, and stability of the myocyte, multiple defects in these proteins can
lead to cardiomyopathy, usually with a dilated phenotype (Fig. 259-1).
For example, desmin forms intermediate filaments that connect the
nuclear and plasma membranes, Z-lines, and the intercalated disks
between muscle cells. Desmin mutations impair the transmission of
force and signaling for both cardiac and skeletal muscle and may cause
combined cardiac (restrictive > dilated) and skeletal myopathy.
Defects in the sarcolemmal membrane proteins are associated with
DCM. The best known is dystrophin, encoded by the X chromosome
gene DMD, abnormalities of which cause Duchenne’s and Becker’s
muscle dystrophy. (Interestingly, abnormal dystrophin can be acquired
when the coxsackie virus cleaves dystrophin during viral myocarditis.)
This protein provides a network that supports the sarcolemma and also
connects to the sarcomere. The progressive functional defect in both
cardiac and skeletal muscle reflects vulnerability to mechanical stress.
Dystrophin is associated at the membrane with a complex of other proteins, such as metavinculin, abnormalities of which also cause DCM.
Defects in the sarcolemmal channel proteins (channelopathies) are generally associated with primary arrhythmias, but mutations in SCN5A,
the α subunit of the Nav 1.5 ion channel protein, distinct from those
that cause the Brugada or long QT syndromes, have been implicated in
DCM with conduction disease.
Nuclear membrane protein defects in cardiac and skeletal muscle
occur in either autosomal (lamin A/C) or X-linked (emerin) patterns.
These defects are associated with a high prevalence of atrial and ventricular arrhythmias and conduction system disease, which can occur
in some family members without or before detectable cardiomyopathy.
Intercalated disks contribute to intracellular connections, allowing
mechanical and electrical coupling between cells and also connections
to desmin filaments within the cell. Mutations in proteins of the desmosomal complex compromise attachment of the myocytes, which can
become disconnected and die via activation of Wnt/β-catenin and proinflammatory signaling pathways, to be replaced by fat and fibrous tissue.
These areas are highly arrhythmogenic and may dilate to form aneurysms. Although more often noted in the right ventricle (arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy), this condition can affect both
ventricles and has also been termed “arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy.”
As many signaling pathways are conserved over multiple systems,
we anticipate discovering extracardiac manifestations of abnormal
TABLE 259-1 Typical Presentation with Symptomatic Cardiomyopathy
DILATED RESTRICTIVE HYPERTROPHIC
Ejection fraction (normal >55%) Usually <30% when symptoms severe Usually >40–50% >60%
Left ventricular diastolic
dimension (normal <55 mm)
≥60 mm if chronic <60 mm (may be decreased) Often decreased
Left ventricular wall thickness Normal or decreased Normal or increased Markedly increased
Atrial size Increased, left before right Increased; may be massive and involve both
atria equally
Increased; related to
elevated filling pressures
Valvular regurgitation Related to annular and ventricular dilation; mitral
appears earlier during decompensation; tricuspid
regurgitation with right ventricular dysfunction
Related to endocardial involvement; frequent
mitral and tricuspid regurgitation, rarely severe
Related to valve-septum
interaction; mitral
regurgitation
Common first symptoms Exertional intolerance Exertional intolerance, fluid retention early, may
have dominant right-sided symptoms
Exertional intolerance; may
have chest pain
Congestive symptomsa Left before right, except right prominent in young
adults
Right often dominates Left-sided congestion at rest
may develop late
Arrhythmias Ventricular tachyarrhythmia; conduction block
in Chagas’ disease, and some genetic etiologies.
Atrial fibrillation
Conduction disease is common in amyloidosis, in
which ventricular arrhythmias are uncommon.
Atrial fibrillation is very common
Ventricular tachyarrhythmias;
atrial fibrillation
a
Left-sided symptoms of pulmonary congestion: dyspnea on exertion, orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea. Right-sided symptoms of systemic venous congestion:
hepatic and abdominal distention, discomfort on bending, peripheral edema. It should be noted that overlaps exist between these phenotypes, such that nondilated
cardiomyopathy may have aspects of both dilated and restrictive cardiomyopathy, while restrictive cardiomyopathy with small internal ventricular dimensions may be
difficult to distinguish from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
TABLE 259-2 Initial Evaluation of Cardiomyopathy
Clinical Evaluation
Thorough history and physical examination to identify cardiac and noncardiac
disordersa
Detailed family history of heart failure, cardiomyopathy, skeletal myopathy,
conduction disorders, tachyarrhythmias, and sudden death
History of alcohol, illicit drugs, chemotherapy, or radiation therapya
Assessment of ability to perform routine and desired activitiesa
Assessment of volume status, orthostatic blood pressure, body mass indexa
Laboratory Evaluation
Electrocardiograma
Chest radiographa
Two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiograma
Magnetic resonance imaging for evidence of myocardial inflammation and fibrosis
Chemistry:
Serum sodium,a
potassium,a
calcium,a
magnesiuma
Fasting glucose (glycohemoglobin in diabetes mellitus)
Creatinine,a
blood urea nitrogena
Albumin,a
total protein,a
liver function testsa
Lipid profile
Thyroid-stimulating hormonea
Serum iron, transferrin saturation
Urinalysis
Creatine kinase isoforms
Cardiac troponin levels
Hematology:
Hemoglobin/hematocrita
White blood cell count with differential,a
including eosinophils
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate
Initial Evaluation When Specific Diagnoses Are Suspected
DNA sequencing for genetic disease, panel selection based on phenotype
Titers for infection in the setting of clinical suspicion:
Acute viral (coxsackie, echovirus, influenza)
Human immunodeficiency virus
Chagas’ (Trypanosoma cruzi), Lyme (Borrelia burgdorferi), toxoplasmosis
Catheterization with coronary angiography in patients with angina who are
candidates for interventiona
Serologies for active rheumatologic disease
Endomyocardial biopsy including sample for electron microscopy when
suspecting specific diagnosis with therapeutic implications
a
Level I recommendations from American College of Cardiology/American Heart
Association Practice Guidelines for Chronic Heart Failure in the Adult.
1956 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
TABLE 259-3 Selected Genetic Defects Associated with Cardiomyopathy
GENE PRODUCT INHERITANCE CARDIAC PHENOTYPE
ISOLATED CARDIAC
PHENOTYPEa EXTRACARDIAC MANIFESTATIONS
Sarcomere ACTC1 (cardiac actin) AD HCM, DCM Yes
MYH7 (β myosin heavy chain) AD HCM, DCM, LVNC Yes Skeletal myopathy
MYBPC3 (myosin binding protein C) AD HCM Yes
TNNT2 (cardiac troponin T) AD HCM, DCM, LVNC Yes
TNNI3 (cardiac troponin I) AD, AR HCM, DCM, RCM Yes
TTN (Titin) AD DCM Yes
TPM1 (α-tropomyosin) AD HCM, DCM Yes
TNNC1 (cardiac troponin C) AD DCM Yes
MYL2 (myosin regulatory light chain) AD HCM Yes Skeletal myopathy
MYL3 (myosin essential light chain) AD HCM Yes
Z-Disk and
Cytoskeleton
DES (desmin) AD RCM, DCM Yes Skeletal myopathy
FLNC (filamin C) AD DCM Yes Skeletal myopathy
NEXN (nexilin) AD DCM Yes
VCL (vinculin) AD DCM Yes
Nuclear
Membrane
LMNA (lamin A/C) AD, AR CDDC Yes Skeletal myopathy
EMD (emerin) X-linked CDDC No Skeletal myopathy, contractures
ExcitationContraction
Coupling
PLN (phospholamban) AD DCM, ARVC Yes
SCN5A (NAV 1.5) AD CDDC Yes Note other mutations associated
with Brugada syndrome
RYR2 (cardiac ryanodine receptor) AD ARVC Yes
CASQ2 (calsequestrin 2) AR ARVC Yes
Cellular
Metabolism
PRKAG2 (γ-subunit of AMP kinase) AD HCM+ Yes
LAMP2 (lysosomal associated
membrane protein)
X-linked HCM+ Nob Danon’s disease: skeletal myopathy,
cognitive impairment
TAZ (tafazzin) X-linked DCM, LVNC No Barth’s syndrome: skeletal
myopathy, cognitive impairment,
neutropenia
FXN (frataxin) AR HCM No Friedreich’s ataxia: ataxia, diabetes
mellitus type 2
TMEM43 (transmembrane protein 43) AD ARVC Yes
GLA (α-galactosidase-A) X-linked HCM+ No Fabry’s disease: renal failure,
angiokeratomas and painful
neuropathy
Mitochondria Mitochondrial DNA Maternal
transmission
DCM, HCM No MELAS, MERRF, Kearns-Sayre
syndrome, ocular myopathy
Sarcolemmal
Membrane
DMD (dystrophin) X-linked DCM Nob Duchenne’s and Becker’s muscular
dystrophy
DMPK (dystrophica myotonica
protein kinase)
AD DCM No Myotonic dystrophy type 1
Desmosome DSP (desmoplakin) JUP (Plakoglobin) AD, AR ARVC, DCM Yes Carvajal syndrome (AR), Naxos
syndrome (AR), “woolly hair” and
hyperkeratosis of palms and soles
DSG2 (desmoglein 2), DSC2
(desmocollin 2), PKP2 (plakophilin 2)
AD ARVC Yes
Other Examples RBM20 (RNA binding motif 20) AD DCM Yes
PSEN1 (presenilin-1,2) AD DCM Yes Dementia
BAG3 (BCL2-associated athanogene
3)
AD DCM Yes
ALPK3 (α-kinase 3) AR HCM Yes
a
Indicates that the usual clinical presentation is of isolated cardiomyopathy; however, occasionally present extracardiac manifestations are also provided. b
Indicates that
isolated cardiac phenotype can occur in women with the X-linked defects.
Abbreviations: AD, autosomal dominant; AR, autosomal recessive; ARVC, arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy; CDDC, conduction disease with dilated
cardiomyopathy; DCM, dilated cardiomyopathy; HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; HCM+, HCM with preexcitation; LVNC, left ventricular noncompaction; MELAS,
(mitochondrial) myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes syndrome; MERRF, myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers; RCM, restrictive
cardiomyopathy.
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1957CHAPTER 259
proteins initially considered restricted to the heart. In contrast, the
monogenic disorders of metabolism that affect the heart are already
clearly recognized to affect multiple organ systems. Currently, it is most
important to diagnose defective enzymes for which specific therapy
can now ameliorate the course of disease, such as with alpha-galactosidase A deficiency (Fabry’s disease). Abnormalities of mitochondrial
DNA (maternally transmitted) impair energy production with multiple clinical manifestations, including impaired cognitive function
and skeletal myopathy. The phenotypic expression is highly variable
depending on the distribution of the maternal mitochondria during
embryonic development. Heritable systemic diseases, such as familial
amyloidosis and hemochromatosis, can affect the heart without mutation of genes expressed in the heart.
For any patient with suspected or proven genetic disease, family
members should be considered and evaluated in a longitudinal fashion.
Screening generally includes both an echocardiogram and electrocardiogram (ECG). The indications and implications for confirmatory
specific genetic testing vary depending on the specific mutation. The
profound questions raised by families about diseases shared and passed
down merit serious and sensitive discussion, ideally provided by a
trained genetic counselor.
DILATED CARDIOMYOPATHY
An enlarged left ventricle with reduced systolic function as measured
by left ventricular ejection fraction characterizes DCM (Figs. 259-2,
259-3, and 259-4). Systolic failure is more prominent than diastolic
dysfunction. Although the syndrome of DCM has many disparate
etiologies (Table 259-4), these often evolve to common pathways
of secondary response and disease progression (convergent phenotype). When myocardial injury is acquired, some myocytes may die
initially, whereas others survive only to have later programmed cell
death (apoptosis), and remaining myocytes hypertrophy in response
to increased wall stress. Local and circulating factors stimulate deleterious secondary responses that contribute to progression of disease.
Dynamic remodeling of the interstitial scaffolding affects diastolic
function and the amount of ventricular dilation. Mitral regurgitation
commonly develops as the valvular apparatus is distorted and is usually
substantial by the time heart failure is severe. Many cases that present
“acutely” have progressed silently through these stages over months
to years. Dilation and decreased function of the right ventricle may
result directly from the initial injury, but more often develops later
in response to elevated afterload presented by secondary pulmonary
hypertension and in relation to mechanical interactions with the failing
left ventricle.
Regardless of the nature and degree of direct cell injury and loss, the
resulting impairment often reflects secondary responses that may be
modifiable or reversible. About a third of patients with new-onset cardiomyopathy demonstrate substantial spontaneous recovery. Chronic
DCM may also improve in some patients without underlying structural
heart disease to near-normal ejection fractions during recommended
therapy with neurohormonal modulation, cardiac resynchronization therapy for left bundle branch block, and diuretics as needed to
FIGURE 259-1 Drawing of myocyte indicating multiple sites of abnormal gene products associated with cardiomyopathy. Major functional groups include the sarcomeric
proteins (actin, myosin, tropomyosin, and the associated regulatory proteins), the dystrophin complex stabilizing and connecting the cell membrane to intracellular
structures, the desmosome complexes associated with cell-cell connections and stability, and multiple cytoskeletal proteins that integrate and stabilize the myocyte. ATP,
adenosine triphosphate. (Figure adapted from Jeffrey A. Towbin, MD, University of Tennessee Health Science Center.)
1958 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
FIGURE 259-2 Dilated cardiomyopathy. This gross specimen of a heart removed at
the time of transplantation shows massive left ventricular dilation and moderate
right ventricular dilation. Although the left ventricular wall in particular appears
thinned, there is significant hypertrophy of this heart, which weighs >800 g (upper
limit of normal = 360 g). A defibrillator lead is seen traversing the tricuspid valve into
the right ventricular apex. (Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD, Department
of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
LV
LA
RV
RA
FIGURE 259-3 Dilated cardiomyopathy. This echocardiogram of a young man with
dilated cardiomyopathy shows massive global dilation and thinning of the walls of
the left ventricle (LV). The left atrium (LA) is also enlarged compared to normal. Note
that the echocardiographic and pathologic images are vertically opposite, such that
the LV is by convention on the top right in the echocardiographic image and bottom
right in the pathologic images. RA, right atrium; RV, right ventricle. (Image courtesy
of Justina Wu, MD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
FIGURE 259-4 Dilated cardiomyopathy. Microscopic specimen of a dilated
cardiomyopathy showing the nonspecific changes of interstitial fibrosis and
myocyte hypertrophy characterized by increased myocyte size and enlarged,
irregular nuclei. Hematoxylin and eosin–stained section, 100× original magnification.
(Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD, Department of Pathology, Brigham and
Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
maintain fluid balance. In many patients, these therapies can stabilize
cardiac and clinical function and extend survival (Chap. 252). Further
aspects of diagnosis and therapy specific to etiologies of DCM are
discussed below.
■ MYOCARDITIS
Myocarditis (inflammation of the heart) is most often attributable to
infective agents but can also arise from other causes of inflammation.
Infectious myocarditis cannot be assumed from a presentation of
decreased systolic function in the setting of an acute infection, as any
severe condition causing systemic cytokine release can depress cardiac
function transiently, as seen frequently in medical intensive care units.
Myocardial inflammation without obvious infection is seen in sarcoidosis and giant cell myocarditis, with checkpoint inhibitor therapy, in
eosinophilic myocarditis, or in association with autoimmune diseases
such as polymyositis and systemic lupus erythematosus. Fulminant
myocarditis can result from viral infection, checkpoint inhibitor therapy, giant cell myocarditis, or necrotizing eosinophilic myocarditis,
and is often complicated by recurrent arrhythmias. Early recognition
of fulminant myocarditis is crucial as recovery to near-normal cardiac
function can occur during aggressive circulatory support.
■ INFECTIVE MYOCARDITIS
Infections can injure the myocardium through direct invasion, disruption of normal cellular processes, production of cardiotoxic substances,
or stimulation of chronic inflammation with or without persistent
infection. Myocarditis has been reported with almost all types of
infective agents but is most commonly associated with viruses and the
protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi. The pathogenesis of viral myocarditis
has been extensively studied in murine models as divided into three
phases. For the direct viral invasion phase, viruses gain entry through
the respiratory or gastrointestinal tract and infect organs possessing
specific receptors, such as the coxsackie-adenovirus receptors on the
heart, which are prominent around intercalated disks and the atrioventricular (AV) node. Viral infection and replication can cause myocardial injury and lysis. For example, the enteroviral protease 2A degrades
the myocyte structural protein dystrophin and interacts with other host
proteins to induce apoptosis, inhibit the host serum response factor,
and interfere with autophagy of protein aggregates.
The second phase is the nonspecific (innate) host response to infection, which is heavily dependent on Toll-like receptors that recognize
common antigenic patterns. Cytokine release is rapid, followed by triggered activation and expansion of specific T- and B-cell populations.
This initial response appears to be crucial, as early immunosuppression
in animal models can increase viral replication and worsen cardiac
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1959CHAPTER 259
injury. However, successful recovery from viral infection depends not
only on the efficacy of the immune response to limit viral infection,
but also on timely downregulation to prevent ongoing autoimmune
injury to the host.
The secondary acquired (adaptive) immune response is specifically
addressed against the viral proteins and can include both T-cell infiltration and antibodies to viral proteins. If unchecked, the acquired
immune response can perpetuate secondary cardiac damage. Ongoing
cytokine release activates matrix metalloproteinases that can disrupt
the collagen and elastin scaffolding of the heart, potentiating ventricular dilation. Stimulation of profibrotic factors leads to pathologic
interstitial fibrosis. Some antibodies triggered through co-stimulation
or molecular mimicry also recognize targets within the host myocyte,
such as the β-adrenergic receptor, α-myosin, and troponin, but it
remains unclear as to whether or not these antibodies contribute to
cardiac dysfunction in humans or merely serve as markers of cardiac
injury.
It is not known how long the viruses persist in the human heart,
whether late persistence of the viral genome continues to be deleterious, or how often a dormant virus can be reactivated. Genomes of
common viruses are often present in patients with clinical diagnoses of
myocarditis or DCM, but there is little information on how often these
are present in patients without cardiac disease (see below). Further
information is needed to understand the relative timing and contribution of infection, immune responses, and secondary adaptations in the
progression of heart failure after viral myocarditis (Fig. 259-5).
Clinical Presentation of Viral Myocarditis Acute viral myocarditis
often presents with symptoms and signs of heart failure, but may
present with chest pain and ECG changes suggestive of pericarditis or
acute myocardial infarction, and occasionally with atrial or ventricular
tachyarrhythmias. The typical patient with presumed viral myocarditis
is a young to middle-aged adult who develops progressive dyspnea and
weakness within a few days to weeks after a viral syndrome that was
accompanied by fever and myalgias. Subacute presentation may occur
within a few weeks or months of a viral infection. As viral infections
are common and the resulting cytokine activation can depress cardiac
function, it is often difficult to determine whether viral infection caused
myocarditis or unmasked a previously unrecognized cardiomyopathy.
A small number of patients present with fulminant myocarditis,
with rapid progression within hours from a severe febrile respiratory
syndrome to cardiogenic shock that may involve multiple organ systems, leading to renal failure, hepatic failure, and coagulopathy. These
patients are typically young adults who have recently been dismissed
from urgent care settings with antibiotics for bronchitis, only to return
within a few days in rapidly progressive cardiogenic shock. Recognition of patients with this fulminant presentation is potentially life-saving
as more than half can survive with aggressive support, which may
include high-dose intravenous catecholamine therapy and sometimes
temporary mechanical circulatory support. The ejection fraction function of these patients often recovers to near-normal, although residual
diastolic dysfunction may limit vigorous exercise for some survivors.
Chronic viral myocarditis is often invoked, but rarely proven, as a
diagnosis when no other cause of DCM can be identified. Many cases
attributed to previous viral infection will later be recognized as due
to genetic causes or consumption of excess alcohol or illicit stimulant
drugs. The proportion of chronic DCM due to viral infection remains
a subject of controversy.
Laboratory Evaluation for Myocarditis The initial evaluation
for suspected myocarditis includes an ECG, an echocardiogram, and
serum levels of troponin and creatine phosphokinase, of which both
cardiac and skeletal muscle fractions may be elevated. Magnetic resonance imaging is increasingly used for the diagnosis of myocarditis,
which is supported but not proven by evidence of increased tissue
edema and gadolinium enhancement (Fig. 259-6), particularly in the
mid-wall (as distinct from usual coronary artery territories).
Endomyocardial biopsy is indicated when a new presentation of
heart failure is accompanied by conduction blocks or ventricular
tachyarrhythmias, which suggest possible etiologies of noninfectious
TABLE 259-4 Major Causes of Dilated Cardiomyopathy (with Common
Examples)
Inflammatory Myocarditis
Infective
Viral (coxsackie,a
adenovirus,a
HIV, hepatitis C)
Parasitic (T. cruzi—Chagas’ disease, trypanosomiasis, toxoplasmosis)
Bacterial (diphtheria)
Spirochetal (Borrelia burgdorferi—Lyme disease)
Rickettsial (Q fever)
Fungal (with systemic infection)
Noninfective
Granulomatous inflammatory disease
Sarcoidosis
Giant cell myocarditis
Eosinophilic myocarditis
Polymyositis, dermatomyositis
Collagen vascular disease
Checkpoint inhibitor chemotherapy
Transplant rejection
Toxic
Alcohol
Catecholamines: amphetamines, cocaine
Chemotherapeutic agents (anthracyclines, trastuzumab)
Interferon
Other therapeutic agents (hydroxychloroquine, chloroquine)
Drugs of misuse (emetine, anabolic steroids)
Heavy metals: lead, mercury
Occupational exposure: hydrocarbons, arsenicals
Metabolica
Nutritional deficiencies: thiamine, selenium, carnitine
Electrolyte deficiencies: calcium, phosphate, magnesium
Endocrinopathy
Thyroid disease
Pheochromocytoma
Diabetes
Obesity
Hemochromatosis
Inherited Metabolic Pathway Defectsa
Familiala
(See Table 259-3)
Skeletal and cardiac myopathy
Dystrophin-related dystrophy (Duchenne’s, Becker’s)
Mitochondrial myopathies (e.g., Kearns-Sayre syndrome)
Hemochromatosis
Associated with other systemic diseases
Susceptibility to immune-mediated myocarditis
Overlap with Nondilated Cardiomyopathy
“Minimally dilated cardiomyopathy”
Hemochromatosisa
Amyloidosisa
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathya
(“burned-out”)
“Idiopathic”a
Miscellaneous (Shared Elements of Above Etiologies)
Arrhythmogenic ventricular cardiomyopathy
Peripartum cardiomyopathy
Left ventricular noncompactiona
Tachycardia-related cardiomyopathy
Supraventricular arrhythmias with uncontrolled rate
Very frequent nonsustained ventricular tachycardia or high premature
ventricular complex burden
a
Some specific cases can be linked now to specific genetic mutation in a familial
cardiomyopathy; others with similar phenotypes that appear to be acquired or
idiopathic may represent genetic factors not yet identified.
1960 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
FIGURE 259-6 Magnetic resonance image of myocarditis showing the typical midwall location (arrow) for late gadolinium enhancement from cardiac inflammation
and scarring. (Image courtesy of Ron Blankstein, MD, and Marcelo Di Carli, MD,
Division of Nuclear Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
Ab anti-myocyte surface proteins
Ab anti-myocyte cellular proteins
Ab anti-pathogen
Natural killer T cells
Specific T cell respones
Ab anti-pathogen
Cytokines
Entry into myocytes
Chronic dilated
cardiomyopathy
Persistent or latent
infection Delayed apoptosis
Myocyte lysis
Viral replication
and protein expression Viremia
Infection Immune Responses
Chronic
Dilated cardiomyopathy
Macrophages
Alterations in
extracellular matrix
FIGURE 259-5 Schematic diagram demonstrating the possible progression from infection through direct,
secondary, and autoimmune responses to dilated cardiomyopathy. Most of the supporting evidence for this
sequence is derived from animal models. It is not known to what degree persistent infection and/or ongoing
immune responses contribute to ongoing myocardial injury in the chronic phase.
FIGURE 259-7 Acute myocarditis. Microscopic image of an endomyocardial biopsy
showing massive infiltration with mononuclear cells and occasional eosinophils
associated with clear myocyte damage. The myocyte nuclei are enlarged and
reactive. Such extensive involvement of the myocardium would lead to extensive
replacement fibrosis even if the inflammatory response could be suppressed.
Hematoxylin and eosin–stained section, 200× original magnification. (Image
courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD, Department of Pathology, Brigham and
Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
inflammatory causes that warrant aggressive immunosuppression,
such as sarcoidosis or giant cell myocarditis. The indications, yield,
and benefit of endomyocardial biopsy for evaluation of myocarditis or
new-onset cardiomyopathy are not well established. When biopsy is
performed, the key Dallas criteria for myocarditis include lymphocytic
infiltrate with evidence of myocyte necrosis (Fig. 259-7) and are negative in 80–90% of patients with clinical myocarditis. Negative Dallas
criteria can reflect sampling error or early resolution of lymphocytic
infiltrates, but may also be influenced by the insensitivity of the test
when inflammation results from cytokines and antibody-mediated
injury. Routine histologic examination of endomyocardial biopsy
rarely reveals a specific infective etiology, such as toxoplasmosis or
cytomegalovirus subsets. Immunohistochemistry of myocardial biopsy
samples is commonly used to identify active lymphocyte subtypes and
may also detect upregulation of HLA antigens and the presence of
complement components attributed to inflammation, but the specificity and significance of these findings are uncertain.
An increase in circulating viral titers
between acute and convalescent blood samples
supports a diagnosis of acute viral myocarditis with potential spontaneous improvement.
Respiratory virus panels can detect adenovirus,
influenza, and coronavirus. There is no established role for measuring circulating anti-heart
antibodies, which may be the result, rather than
a cause, of myocardial injury and have also been
found in patients with coronary artery disease
and genetic cardiomyopathy.
Patients with recent or ongoing viral syndromes have been classified into three levels of
myocarditis diagnosis. (1) Possible subclinical
acute myocarditis is diagnosed when a typical
viral syndrome occurs without cardiac symptoms, but with elevated biomarkers of cardiac
injury, ECG suggestive of acute injury, and/
or reduced left ventricular ejection fraction or
regional wall motion abnormality. (2) Probable
acute myocarditis is diagnosed when the above
criteria are met and accompanied by cardiac
symptoms, such as shortness of breath or chest
pain, which can result from pericarditis or
myocarditis. When clinical findings of pericarditis are accompanied by elevated troponin
or CK-MB or abnormal cardiac wall motion,
the terms perimyocarditis or myopericarditis
are sometimes used. (3) Definite myocarditis
is diagnosed when there is histologic or immunohistologic evidence
of inflammation on endomyocardial biopsy (see below) and does not
require any other laboratory or clinical criteria. Magnetic resonance
imaging is increasingly employed early in the evaluation for possible
myocarditis. With the original 2009 Lake Louise criteria for myocarditis, a positive study required any two of three findings: abnormal
T2-weighted imaging or early or late gadolinium enhancement.
Revised criteria for specificity require both a T2-weighted criterion
indicating edema and one T1-based criterion consistent with inflammatory injury, although more liberal diagnostic criteria allowing for
the presence of either one yields higher sensitivity. The presence of
pericardial effusion supports the diagnosis of inflammation, although
it is not specific.
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1961CHAPTER 259
■ SPECIFIC VIRUSES IMPLICATED IN MYOCARDITIS
In humans, viruses are rarely proven to be the direct cause of clinical
myocarditis. First implicated was the picornavirus family of RNA
viruses, principally the enteroviruses, coxsackie virus, echovirus, and
poliovirus. Influenza, another RNA virus, is implicated with varying
frequency every winter and spring as epitopes change. Of the DNA
viruses, adenovirus, vaccinia, and the herpesviruses (varicella-zoster
virus, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, and human herpesvirus
6 [HHV6]) are well recognized to cause myocarditis but also occur
commonly in the healthy population. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
detects viral genomes in the majority of patients with DCM, but also
in normal “control” hearts. Most often detected are parvovirus B19 and
HHV6, which may affect the cardiovascular system, in part, through
infection of vascular endothelial cells. However, their contribution to
chronic cardiomyopathy is uncertain, as serologic evidence of exposure
is present in many children and most adults.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was associated with an
incidence of DCM of 1–2%. However, with the advent of highly active
antiretroviral therapy (HAART), HIV has been associated with a significantly lower incidence of cardiac disease. Cardiomyopathy in HIV
may also result from cardiac involvement with other associated viruses,
such as cytomegalovirus and hepatitis C. Antiviral drugs to treat
chronic HIV can cause cardiomyopathy, both directly and through
drug hypersensitivity. The clinical picture may be complicated by
pericardial effusions and pulmonary hypertension. There is a high frequency of lymphocytic myocarditis found at autopsy, and viral particles
have been demonstrated in the myocardium in some cases, consistent
with direct causation.
Hepatitis C has been repeatedly implicated in cardiomyopathy,
particularly in Germany and Asia. Cardiac dysfunction may improve
after interferon therapy. As this cytokine itself often depresses cardiac
function transiently, careful coordination of its administration and
ongoing clinical evaluation are critical. The cardiac effects of curative
treatments for hepatitis C on cardiac function have not yet been well
studied but do not appear to have limited the successful transplantation
of hepatitis C–positive donors. Involvement of the heart with hepatitis
B is uncommon but can be seen when associated with systemic vasculitis (polyarteritis nodosa).
Additional viruses implicated specifically in myocarditis include
mumps, respiratory syncytial virus, the arboviruses (dengue fever and
yellow fever), and arenaviruses (Lassa fever). For any serious infection,
the systemic inflammatory response can cause nonspecific depression
of cardiac function, which is generally reversible if the patient survives.
This nonspecific inflammatory response is likely responsible for most
of the cardiac findings with SARS-CoV-2, for which clinical information is accumulating rapidly. There is some evidence for direct cardiomyocyte invasion by the virus, consistent with an early model of acute
myocarditis in rabbits caused by rabbit coronavirus. Some patients do
present with ECG changes mimicking acute myocardial infarction.
The endothelium is also a distinct cellular target of SARS-CoV-2, and
the resulting vasoconstrictive and prothrombotic endotheliopathy may
contribute to myocardial ischemia (and stroke). The dominant injury
is to the lungs, where adult respiratory distress syndrome can develop,
particularly in older patients and those with underlying comorbidities.
When heart failure develops later in the course, it is usually in the setting of refractory respiratory failure and other organ failure from which
survival is unlikely.
■ THERAPY OF VIRAL MYOCARDITIS
There is currently no specific therapy recommended during any
stage of viral myocarditis. During acute infection, therapy with
anti-inflammatory or immunosuppressive medications is avoided, as
their use has been shown to increase viral replication and myocardial
injury in animal models. Therapy with specific antiviral agents (such
as oseltamivir) has not been studied in specific relation to cardiac
involvement. There is ongoing investigation into the impact of antiviral
therapy to treat chronic viral persistence identified from endomyocardial biopsy. Large trials of immunosuppressive therapy for Dallas
criteria–positive myocarditis have been negative. There are some initial
encouraging results and ongoing investigations with immunosuppressive therapy for immune-mediated myocarditis defined by immunohistologic criteria on biopsy or circulating antimyocardial antibodies
in the absence of myocardial viral genomes. However, neither antiviral
nor anti-inflammatory therapies are currently recommended. Until we
have a better understanding of the phases of viral myocarditis and the
effects of targeted therapies, treatment will continue to be guided by
general recommendations for DCM.
■ OTHER INFECTIOUS CAUSES
Parasitic Myocarditis Chagas’ disease is the third most common
parasitic infection in the world and the most common infective cause
of cardiomyopathy. The protozoan T. cruzi is transmitted by the bite
of the reduviid bug, endemic in the rural areas of South and Central
America. Transmission can also occur through blood transfusion,
organ donation, from mother to fetus, and occasionally orally. While
programs to eradicate the insect vector have decreased the prevalence
from about 16 million to <10 million in South America, cases are
increasingly recognized in Western developed countries (see Global
Perspectives below).
Multiple pathogenic mechanisms are implicated. The parasite
itself can cause myocyte lysis and primary neuronal damage. Specific
immune responses may recognize the parasites or related antigens and
lead to chronic immune activation in the absence of detectable parasites. Molecular techniques have revealed persistent parasite DNA fragments in infected individuals. Further evidence for persistent infection
is the eruption of parasitic skin lesions during immunosuppression
after cardiac transplantation. As with viral myocarditis, the relative
roles of persistent infection and of secondary autoimmune injury have
not been resolved (Fig. 259-5). An additional factor in the progression
of Chagas’ disease is the autonomic dysfunction and microvascular
damage that may contribute to cardiac and gastrointestinal disease.
The acute phase of Chagas’ disease with parasitemia is usually
unrecognized, but in fewer than 5% of cases, it presents clinically
within a few weeks of infection with nonspecific symptoms or occasionally with acute myocarditis and meningoencephalitis. In the
absence of antiparasitic therapy, the silent stage progresses slowly for
>10–30 years in almost half of patients to manifest chronically in the
cardiac and gastrointestinal systems. Features typical of Chagas’ disease
are conduction system abnormalities, particularly sinus node and AV
node dysfunction and right bundle branch block. Atrial fibrillation and
ventricular tachyarrhythmias also occur. Small ventricular aneurysms
are common, particularly at the ventricular apex. These dilated ventricles are particularly thrombogenic, giving rise to pulmonary and systemic emboli. Xenodiagnosis, detection of the parasite itself, is rarely
performed. The serologic tests for specific IgG antibodies against the
trypanosome lack sufficient specificity and sensitivity, requiring two
separate positive tests to make a diagnosis.
Treatment of the advanced stages focuses on clinical manifestations
of the disease and includes heart failure medications, pacemakerdefibrillators, and anticoagulation. The most common antiparasitic
therapies are benznidazole and nifurtimox, which have been effective
in children with chronic T. cruzi infection. Both drugs are associated
with multiple severe reactions, including dermatitis, gastrointestinal
distress, and neuropathy. Moreover, in a large trial of adults with established Chagas’ cardiomyopathy, benznidazole did not prevent disease
progression, leaving the role of antiparasitic therapy unclear. Survival
is <30% at 5 years after the onset of overt clinical heart failure. Patients
without major extracardiac disease have occasionally undergone transplantation, after which they require surveillance testing and recurrent
antiparasitic therapy to suppress reactivation of infection.
African trypanosomiasis infection results from the tsetse fly bite
and can occur in travelers exposed during trips to Africa. The West
African form is caused by Trypanosoma brucei gambiense and progresses silently over years. The East African form caused by T. brucei
rhodesiense can progress rapidly through perivascular infiltration to
myocarditis and heart failure, with frequent arrhythmias. The diagnosis is made by identification of trypanosomes in blood, lymph nodes,
1962 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
or other affected sites. Antiparasitic therapy has limited efficacy and is
determined by the specific type and the stage of infection. Toxoplasmosis
is contracted through ingestion of undercooked infected beef or pork,
transmission from feline feces, organ transplantation, transfusion, or
maternal-fetal transmission. Immunocompromised hosts are most
likely to experience reactivation of latent infection from cysts, found
in up to 40% of autopsies of patients dying from HIV infection. Toxoplasmosis may present with encephalitis or chorioretinitis and, in the
heart, can cause myocarditis, pericardial effusion, constrictive pericarditis, and heart failure. The diagnosis in an immunocompetent patient
is made when the IgM is positive and the IgG becomes positive later.
Active toxoplasmosis may be suspected in an immunocompromised
patient with myocarditis and a positive IgG titer for toxoplasmosis, particularly when avidity testing identifies high specificity of the antibody.
Fortuitous sampling occasionally reveals the cysts in the myocardium.
Combination therapy can include pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine or
clindamycin.
Trichinellosis is caused by Trichinella spiralis larva ingested with
undercooked meat. Larvae migrating into skeletal muscles cause myalgias, weakness, and fever. Periorbital and facial edema, and conjunctival and retinal hemorrhage may also be seen. Although the larva may
occasionally invade the myocardium, clinical heart failure is rare and,
when observed, attributed to the eosinophilic inflammatory response.
The diagnosis is made from the specific serum antibody and is further
supported by the presence of eosinophilia. Treatment includes antihelminthic drugs (albendazole, mebendazole) and glucocorticoids if
inflammation is severe.
Cardiac involvement with echinococcus is rare, but cysts can form
and rupture in the myocardium and pericardium.
Bacterial Infections Most bacterial infections can involve the
heart occasionally through direct invasion and abscess formation,
but do so rarely. More commonly, systemic inflammatory responses
depress contractility in severe infection and sepsis. Diphtheria specifically affects the heart in almost one-half of cases, and cardiac involvement is the most common cause of death in patients with this infection.
The prevalence of vaccines has shifted the incidence of diphtheria from
children worldwide to countries without routine immunization and to
older populations who have lost their immunity. The bacillus releases
a toxin that impairs protein synthesis and may particularly affect the
conduction system. The specific antitoxin should be administered as
soon as possible, with higher priority than antibiotic therapy. Clostridial toxin causes myocardial damage, and gas bubbles can be detected
in the myocardium, with occasional abscess formation in the myocardium and pericardium. Streptococcal infection with β-hemolytic
streptococci is most commonly associated with acute rheumatic fever
and is characterized by inflammation and fibrosis of cardiac valves and
systemic connective tissue, but it can also lead to a myocarditis with
focal or diffuse infiltrates of mononuclear cells. Other systemic bacterial infections that can involve the heart include brucellosis, legionella,
meningococcus, mycoplasma, psittacosis, and salmonellosis, for which
specific treatment is directed at the systemic infection.
Tuberculosis can involve the myocardium directly as well as through
tuberculous pericarditis, but rarely does so when the disease is treated
with antibiotics. Whipple’s disease is caused by Tropheryma whipplei.
The usual manifestations are in the gastrointestinal tract, but pericarditis, coronary arteritis, valvular lesions, and occasionally clinical heart
failure may also occur. Multidrug antituberculous regimens are effective, but the disease tends to relapse even with appropriate treatment.
Tick-Borne Infections Spirochetal myocarditis has been diagnosed from myocardial biopsies containing Borrelia burgdorferi, which
causes Lyme disease. Lyme carditis most often presents with arthritis
and conduction system disease that resolves within 1–2 weeks of antibiotic treatment and is only rarely implicated in chronic heart failure.
Other tick-borne illnesses associated with febrile illnesses and myocarditis include Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Q fever, and ehrlichiosis,
all of which are treated with doxycycline alone or in combination with
other agents.
■ NONINFECTIVE MYOCARDITIS
Myocardial inflammation can occur in the absence of infectious causes.
The paradigm of noninfective inflammatory myocarditis is cardiac
transplant rejection, from which we have learned that myocardial
depression can develop and reverse quickly, that noncellular mediators
such as antibodies and cytokines play a major role in addition to lymphocytes, and that myocardial antigens are exposed by prior physical
injury and viral infection.
The most commonly diagnosed noninfective inflammatory process
affecting the myocardium is granulomatous myocarditis, including
both sarcoidosis and giant cell myocarditis. Sarcoidosis, as discussed
in Chap. 367, is a multisystem disease most commonly affecting the
lungs. Although classically presenting with higher prevalence in young
African-American men, the epidemiology appears to be changing, with
increasing recognition of sarcoidosis in Caucasian patients in nonurban areas. Patients with pulmonary sarcoid are at high risk for cardiac
involvement, but cardiac sarcoidosis also occurs without clinical lung
disease. Regional clustering of the disease supports the suspicion that
the granulomatous reaction is triggered by infectious or environmental
allergens not yet identified.
The sites and density of cardiac granulomata, the time course,
and the degree of extracardiac involvement are remarkably variable.
Patients may present with rapid-onset heart failure and ventricular
tachyarrhythmias, conduction block, chest pain syndromes, or minor
cardiac findings in the setting of ocular involvement, an infiltrative
skin rash, or a nonspecific febrile illness. They may also present less
acutely after months to years of fluctuating cardiac symptoms. When
ventricular tachycardia or conduction block dominates the initial presentation of heart failure without coronary artery disease, suspicion
should be high for these granulomatous myocarditides.
Depending on the time course, the ventricles may appear restrictive
or dilated. There may be a right ventricular predominance of both
dilation and ventricular arrhythmias, sometimes initially attributed to
arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, with which sarcoidosis shares multiple features.
Small ventricular aneurysms are common in the heart with sarcoid.
Computed tomography of the chest often reveals pulmonary lymphadenopathy even in the absence of clinical lung disease. Metabolic
imaging (positron emission tomography [PET]) of the whole chest
can highlight active sarcoid lesions that are avid for glucose. Magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) of the heart can identify myocardial scar in a
pattern not compatible with myocardial infarction, and this distinctive
type of late gadolinium enhancement is associated, as in other cardiac
disease, with increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias. To rule out
chronic infections, such as tuberculosis or histoplasmosis, as the cause
of adenopathy, the diagnosis often requires pathologic confirmation.
Biopsy of enlarged mediastinal nodes may provide the highest yield.
The scattered granulomata of sarcoidosis are commonly missed on
cardiac biopsy (Fig. 259-8).
Immunosuppressive treatment for sarcoidosis is initiated with highdose glucocorticoids, often supplemented with methotrexate, and is generally more effective in suppressing arrhythmias than improving severely
impaired systolic function. Patients with sarcoid lesions that persist
or recur during tapering of corticosteroids are considered candidates
for other immunosuppressive therapies. Pacemakers and implantable
defibrillators are generally indicated to prevent life-threatening heart
block or ventricular tachycardia, respectively. Because the inflammation often resolves into extensive fibrosis that impairs cardiac function
and provides pathways for reentrant arrhythmias, the prognosis for
improvement is best when the density of granulomata is limited and
the ejection fraction is not severely reduced.
Giant cell myocarditis is less common than sarcoidosis, but accounts
for 10–20% of biopsy-positive cases of myocarditis. Giant cell myocarditis typically presents with rapidly progressive heart failure and
tachyarrhythmias in patients generally older than those with acute viral
myocarditis. Diffuse granulomatous lesions are surrounded by extensive inflammatory infiltrate unlikely to be missed on endomyocardial
biopsy, often with eosinophilic infiltration. Associated conditions are
thymomas, thyroiditis, pernicious anemia, other autoimmune diseases,
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